I must have missed this the first time around but Apple has put up a series of Space Scapes from their rather enjoyable adaptation of Foundation.
Tag: Apple
A Game Boy Camera to FaceTime Bridge

Completely impractical but with a delightfully retro output, this Game Boy Camera to FaceTime bridge is really rather neat.
Miserablism of the iPhone Variety.

The iPhone 15 Pro in it’s fundamentally miserable set of colours.
Apple Digital Sales
Apple’s European DSA Recipients of Services Report (Archive.org) turned up in my RSS feed and it has some quite shockingly low numbers! Whilst personally I prefer a real book over an e-book, I was very surprised to find that Apple has less than 1 million monthly e-book purchasers across the entire EU! And the tvOS and watchOS user base feels incredibly low as well!

Leaking Pipes with Swift and External Executables
Observed with MacOS 12.4/Xcode 13.4.1/Swift 5
There are quite a lot of tutorials out there covering the basics of running external executables from within Swift and, with very little effort, it’s quite easy to throw together something like this…
import Foundation
let wrappedUname = Process()
wrappedUname.executableURL = URL(fileURLWithPath: "/usr/bin/uname")
wrappedUname.arguments = ["-v"]
let unameOutputPipe = Pipe()
let unameErrorPipe = Pipe()
wrappedUname.standardOutput = unameOutputPipe
wrappedUname.standardError = unameErrorPipe
do{
try wrappedUname.run()
} catch {
print("Unexpected error: \(error).")
}
wrappedUname.waitUntilExit()
let unameOutput = String(decoding: unameOutputPipe.fileHandleForReading.readDataToEndOfFile(), as: UTF8.self)
let unameError = String(decoding: unameOutputPipe.fileHandleForReading.readDataToEndOfFile(), as: UTF8.self)
print("Output: " + unameOutput)
print("Error: " + unameError)
Continue reading “Leaking Pipes with Swift and External Executables” MacOS Updates Are Getting Slower

With 30 minutes to prepare and another 25 minutes to actually perform this mere point update (12.3 > 12.4), what – exactly – is a relatively modern Macbook Pro that’s capable of of writing to it’s boot disk at 2.2GB/s+ doing when it upgrades?
Douglas Adams in MacWorld (May 1985)
An old (and, alas, they’re all old now) interview with Douglas Adams from the May 1985 issue of Macworld. Transcription is via OSX’s images to text service.

WWDC 2020
As it’s less than a month to the virtual WWDC, it’s time for an Apple/WWDC wish list.
On the MacOS-next side of things:
- AV1 support baked in (CoreVideo and wherever else it’s needed).
- APFS idle-time dedup.
- January’s ‘Pro’ mode rumours coming to fruition.
- And it’s equal and opposite ‘super battery saver’ mode.
- Time Machine revamp/APFS based time machine.
- Internet Time Machine.
- A BetterTouchTool clone. The touch bar remains a very expensive white elephant, this may make it less of a failure for most.
On the iOS side:
- Options for simultaneous multi lens pictures/video in default camera app.
- Raw photos option in default camera app.
- Option to replace default protocol handlers.
- AV1 support.
Hardware wise:
- A light field camera. This would link well with the LiDAR scanner that’s in the most recent ‘iPad Pro’.
Not in a million years but I still want:
- Aperture 4 with local AI powered object recognition, smart photo manipulation/editing, multi drive support and highly configurable iCloud storage options.
The Apple Memory Hole
The (Unofficial) Apple Archive is a newly launched collection of historic Apple media and video.
It must have been a tremendous amount of work collect and catalogue and, for me, the most interesting years are 2004 and 2005 – the years that lead me to purchase my first Mac (and yes, I did buy into PPC after the intel transition was announced!). I doubt it’ll last – Apple’s lawyers must be itching to write takedown notices – but while it’s there it’s an interesting place to poke around.
I still have that old first machine somewhere and I should dig it out; last time I checked (perhaps 5 years ago) it seemed to run ok. I do hope it’s still in something of a functional state.
NetNewsWire
Huzzah! NetNewsWire – the first RSS reader that I ever really used in anger – is back as a modernised and updated open source project! A lack of external sync services marks it out as still quite far from a usable initial release, but, as soon as some of these are added I shall look at moving away from the moribund Reeder and back to NNW as my desktop RSS reader of choice.

Now all we need is for Google to retask the now defunct Google+ team to resurrecting Google Reader and we can all start RSS’ing like it’s 2007 again! After all, without Google+ (or a similar replacement), there is no need for Google to try and kill off the open web in favour of their own walled garden.
(And for anyone searching; the new NetNewsWire agent string is “NetNewsWire (RSS Reader; https://ranchero.com/netnewswire/)”)